英语作文提供-小学英语作文,中学英语作文,高中英语作文,大学英语作文,中考英语作文,高考英语作文,CET英语作文,考研英语作文

小学英语作文

初中英语作文

高中英语作文

大学英语作文

中考英语作文

高考英语作文

CET英语作文

考研英语作文

Bacteria-考研

Bacteria are extremely small living things. While we measure our own sizes in inches or centimeters, bacterial size is measured in microns. One micron is a thousandth of a millimeter: a pinhead is about a millimeter across. Rod-shaped bacteria are usually from two to four microns long, while rounded ones are generally one micron in diameter. Thus if you enlarged a rounded bacterium a thousand times, it would be just about the size of a pinhead. An adult human magnified by the same amount would be over a mile(1.6 kilometer) tall.

Even with an ordinary microscope, you must look closely to see bacteria. Using a magnification of 100 times, one finds that bacteria are barely visible as tiny rods or dots. One cannot make out anything of their structure. Using special stains, one can see that some bacteria have attached to them wavy-looking "hairs" called flagella. Others have only one flagellum. The flagella rotate, pushing the bacteria through the water. Many bacteria lack flagella and cannot move about by their own power, while others can glide along over surfaces by some little-understood mechanism.

From the bacteria point of view, the world is a very different place from what it is to humans. To a bacterium water is as thick as molasses is to us. Bacteria are so small that they are influenced by the movements of the chemical molecules around them. Bacteria under the microscope, even those with no flagella, often bounce about in the water. This is because they collide with the watery molecules and are pushed this way and that. Molecules move so rapidly that within a tenth of a second the molecules around a bacteria have all been replaced by new ones; even bacteria without flagella are thus constantly exposed to a changing environment.

文章检索

文章列表


·What Is Success?
·Nobel Academy
·The Salinity of Ocean Waters
·Bacteria
·Archaeology
·请对吸烟谈谈你的看法
·I Have Lived For(我为什么而活着)
·Prayer for My Mother(为母亲祈祷)
·Different Strokes of Our Dutie
·The origin of Refrigerators
·Electricity
·The Origin of Sports
·Sleep
·Faciall expression
·NOTICE
·A Full-Time School Called Life
·Andrew Carnegie
·Raising Oysters
·Topaz
·A Letter to a Schoolmate